The Philosophy of Documented Identification



Documented identification is the concept of recording and maintaining the proper and appropriate title and name to an entity, form, person, place, or thing, et cetera. It is used for rightly coding and making apparent concepts that are agreed upon by entities who conduct and handle the relevant agreements. Documented identification varies in form, but from a fundamental basis, it is typically seen as a tangible piece of material that communicates one's form in one way or another. Depending on the level of complexity conducted by the organization, the identification would be giving of unique details. If it is that the entity has a name, date of birth, height, weight, and other components of description, then they would be listed on the 'I.D.', as it is sometimes abbreviated, as documented descriptors of the entity to be identified. Purpose seats the above within the frame of making sense of the different identifiable components of an organization or network. When going about how it is that one would find their own as they do, documented identification would serve in the way of ensuring that an entity or form can be recognized and even interacted with at the appropriate and proper level or grade of interaction. By suppositional theory, within a humanist context, documented identification should be able to lead one to the inevitable point that resides as a full and complete comprehension of the human identities, or identity, implicated.

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